City gives nearly $400,000 more for El Toro fight
Susan McCormack
NEWPORT BEACH -- On a night when anti-El Toro cities pledged $1.7
million to fight the airport’s construction, the City Council approved
two requests Monday for almost $400,000 in funding for pro-airport
groups.
The Orange County Airport Alliance will receive $238,234 from the city to
help its efforts to get an international airport built at the former El
Toro Marine Air Base.
According to the alliance’s executive director, Tom Wall, $85,000 will be
used to create 16 half-hour shows and four 30-second commercials, which
will be broadcast on three cable stations. The public relations firm Hill
& Knowlton will receive $79,000, and $30,000 will go toward managing the
group’s Web site and database and to pay for newspaper advertisements.
Wall said the $173,000 that the city allocated to the alliance in March
ran out this month as expected.
Citizens for Jobs and The Economy will receive $150,000, which will be
used for lobbying efforts in Washington. Two months ago, the city
approved $200,000, not including money for lobbying, for the group.
The decision came at the same time the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority,
a group of eight South County cities opposed to the creation of the
airport, approved spending an additional $1.7 million on its own
campaign. About $819,000 will fund television and print ads, said
planning authority spokeswoman Meg Waters.
In a separate development -- one that could favor South County -- the
state chapter of the American Planning Association announced that the
planning authority’s alternative Millennium Plan for the use of the
former base received its 1999 Excellence in Planning Award. The
Millennium Plan calls for 2,000 acres of the land to be used as a park
and wildlife preserve. The surrounding 2,700 acres would house colleges,
art museums, theaters and a sports and entertainment complex.
The American Planning Association stated that its jury was not taking
sides in the debate on El Toro’ future when it recognized the plan out of
200 submitted proposals. The association’s jury considered city plans and
community development plans as well, but called the Millennium Plan
“outstanding.”
“When you have a base like that, it is a unique, irreplaceable
opportunity,” association spokesman Steve Hopcraft said. “So, it really
behooves planners to do it right.”
John Bridges, principal with planners Cotton/Beland/Associates, said the
project was judged on its originality in bringing together different
cities in such a short time, its transferability to other sites, the
quality of life it provides, and its feasibility and comprehensiveness.
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